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Ooni stool: Ruling houses at loggerheads

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A major crisis is rocking the ruling houses in Ile-Ife, Osun State, over successor to the late Ooni of Ife, Oba Okunade Sijuade.
Two out of the four ruling houses are contending the right to the exalted throne and no one among the duo appears ready to shift ground.
The four ruling houses in Ile-Ife are Oshikola, Ogboru, Giesi and Lafogido.
The Giesi family is claiming that based on the laid down rotational formular to the throne, it naturally falls on it to produce the next Ooni but a clan in Ogboru ruling family is kicking that the kingmakers should not restrict the selection to the Giesi family.
Although it hitherto appeared settled that the Giesi house would produce the next Ooni, being next to the Ogboru ruling house in the succession order established by government declaration on the Ooni chieftaincy title of 1977, a clan in the Ogboru royal family is also now eyeing the position.
The Ogboru family is contending that the Giesi ruling lineage conceded its turn to produce an Ooni to the late Oba Sijuwade, stressing that the concession to the late king was to him as an individual and not to the Ogboru clan as a whole.
Oba Sijuwade, who reigned between 1980 and 2015, is of the Ogboru royal lineage.
The Giesi ruling house last produced an occupant to the position – Ooni Derin Ologbenla – between 1880 and 1894.
The other royal houses have also taken turns to produce Obas for the ancient town at various times.
Read also: Giesi ruling house makes claim to Ooni title
The Ogboru lineage produced Oba Adelekan Olubuse I, who reigned between 1894 and 1910, with the Lafogido ruling house producing his successor, Oba Ademuluyi Ajagu (1910-1930).
Oba Sijuwade’s predecessor, Adesoji Aderemi, who reigned between 1930 and 1980, came from the Oshikola ruling house.
But the Adetipe family from the Amodo clan of the Ogboru ruling house said it has already submitted an expression of interest for the Ooni stool, saying Oba Sijuwade’s time on the throne should not be counted for the Ogboru ruling house.
Sijuade joined his ancestors of July 28.
The development has, however, raised the tempo of the contest for the traditional stool, with fears that getting a new traditional ruler for the ancient town may not be an easy one.
The two ruling families are not ready to shift ground but the Giesi Ruling House seems to be digging deeper insisting that it is its turn to produce the next Ooni.
At a press conference held on Monday, the princes of the Giesi ruling house, namely, Adelowo Ogunleye, Ropo Ogunwusi and Moses Awogbade insisted that it was their clan’s turn to produce the next Ooni and that the kingmakers should allow fairness to take precedence in the selection process.
Ogunleye, who spoke on behalf of the family, said it was the turn of the ruling house based on the government declaration on the Ooni chieftaincy title in 1977.
He said another memorandum issued by the old Oyo State Government dated September 16, 1980 on the appointment of the Ooni provided for four ruling houses: Osinkola, Ogboru, Giesi and Lafogido in that order.
“We want to seize this opportunity to tell the whole world especially the people of Ile-Ife and government of the State of Osun, ably headed by our amiable and indefatigable governor, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, that the normal rotation to the succession to the throne of Ooni which is in vogue in Ile-Ife presently, has ascertained the fact that it is now the turn of Giesi Ruling House Moore Ile Ife to produce the next Ooni of Ife by the special grace of God almighty,” Mr. Ogunleye said.
“It is on record as indicated by the government declaration captioned ‘ The Ooni of Ife Chieftaincy Declaration’ reference no CB141/7/1/540 dated 22nd August, 1977 addressed to the then Executive Secretary of Oranmiyan Local Government Ile-Ife from the office of Military Governor of Oyo State of Nigeria and duly signed by the then Secretary to the Military Government and Head of Service.”

Read also: Intrigues to succeed Ooni begins

He further stated that Paragraph A of the letter stated that the order of rotation among the ruling houses should be as follows: “( 1) Osinkola (2) Ogboru (3) Giesi (4) Lafogido.”
“We want all and sundry to please note that the Osinkola House produced our father Oba Adesoji Aderemi who ruled for 50 years in Ile-Ife and was immediately succeeded by Oba Okunade Sijuwade from Ogboru House who has just transited,” he said.
“It then follows that the next ruling house to produce the next Ooni of Ife should automatically and normally come from Giesi Ruling House as the government approved rotational arrangements.”
But a section of the Ogboru ruling house is raising questions about the order in which the families produce the Ooni.
While calling on the kingmakers to respect traditions and imbibe fairness in their appointment of a new Ooni, a prince of the Ogboru extraction, Adeniran Adetipe, said the Adetipe family from Amodo had submitted an expression of interest for the stool.
He explained that the Ogboru family, which produced the last Ooni, has seven clans, which are Molodo, Amodo, Alaka, Adejokun, Odogbon, Ooni/Ilare and Olubuse/Olodo.
Adetipe said family’s arm of the Ogboru ruling house was not part of the arrangement that saw the late Oba Sijuwade taking the turn that should have been that of the Giesi ruling house.

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